Hi Henry,
My main focus is the data oriented side where it's fairly easy to do without
general entities. As such I'm afraid I'm not able to comment on general
entity rich applications such as XHTML.
My only guess is, if you know you have XHTML text, then you probably have
XHTML aware code to make sense of it. This could have the knowledge of the
general entities built into it, either hard-coded or by some implicit
knowledge of where the appropriate external DTD is. Hence the XHTML
entities would be opaque to the XML wrapper layer.
I guess this is the difference between fixed application specific entities
and dynamically assigned entities used for brevity etc.
On the other hand, perhaps I ought to stop guessing!
Pete.
--
----- Original Message -----
From: "Henry Luo" <henryluo@vibrasoft.net>
To: "Pete Cordell" <petexmldev@tech-know-ware.com>
Cc: <xmlschema-dev@w3.org>
Sent: Friday, September 23, 2005 8:56 AM
Subject: Re: Migration from DTD to XSchema
>
> Hi, Pete
>
> Thanks for the clarification.
>
> My initial hope is that XML Schema can help me get rid of DTD complete.
> But it seems not always possible.
> For example, if in my application, I'd like to make use of XHTML elements
> as part of my schema, the issues is how to handle those general XHTML
> entities?
> If I don't include those XHTML entities in my schema, then probably I'll
> not always be able to cut and paste XHTML source code into my document.
> If I do declare those XHTML entities in my reduced leftover DTD,
> definitely I cannot make it internal in each of my document, too bulky.
> I'll have to put them in external DTD, then as we all know, non-validating
> parser might not be happy with that.
>
> Won't our live be easier if XML includes those HTML entities by default?
>
> Henry
>
> Pete Cordell wrote:
>
>> Hi Henry,
>>
>> The answer is yes and no!
>>
>> There is no equivalent to general entities (&foo;), but that can be left
>> as part of an internal DTD in an XML instance document. (Unless you have
>> a controlled environment general entities in external DTDs are best
>> avoided in case your instance ends up at a non-validating parser.) So
>> this use of entities is not really in scope for schema.
>>
>> One use for parameter entities (%foo;) is the defininition of common
>> groups of element references, e.g.:
>>
>> <!ENTITY foo % "(bar | la | tee)">
>>
>> then
>>
>> <!ELEMENT MyElement ( a | b | %foo; )>
>>
>> Schema supports this use with the xs:group construct.
>>
>> I can't think of other uses of parameter entities are supported.
>>
>> Conditional inclusion of DTD sections is not supported either.
>>
>> HTH,
>>
>> Pete.
>> --
>> =============================================
>> Pete Cordell
>> Tech-Know-Ware Ltd
>> for XML to C++ data binding visit
>> http://www.tech-know-ware.com/lmx
>> (or http://www.xml2cpp.com)
>> =============================================
>>
>> ----- Original Message ----- From: "Henry Luo" <henryluo@vibrasoft.net>
>> To: <xmlschema-dev@w3.org>
>> Sent: Thursday, September 22, 2005 7:40 PM
>> Subject: Migration from DTD to XSchema
>>
>>
>>>
>>> Hi, Everyone
>>>
>>> I'm new to this list. I'm not sure whether the following question has
>>> been asked.
>>>
>>> I'm planning to migrate out from DTD to XML Schema on some of our XML
>>> files.
>>> However, I cannot find the equivalent of the DTD Entity declaration in
>>> XML Schema, or is there?
>>>
>>> So does it mean that I can only convert the element and attribute schema
>>> from DTD to XML Schema, and still have to leave entity declarations in
>>> DTD?
>>>
>>> Henry
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>>
>>
>
>
>